Adhyāya 104 — Śikhaṇḍin-puraskāraḥ (Śikhaṇḍin as Vanguard) and Bhīṣma’s Counter-Advance
सात्यकिस्तु रणे हित्वा गुरुपुत्रं महारथम् । द्रोणं विव्याध विंशत्या सर्वपारशवै: शरै:
sātyakis tu raṇe hitvā guruputraṁ mahāratham | droṇaṁ vivyādha viṁśatyā sarvapāraśavaiḥ śaraiḥ ||
Disse Sañjaya: Mas Sātyaki, no auge da luta, deixou de lado o grande guerreiro de carro, o filho do preceptor (Aśvatthāman), e atingiu Droṇa com vinte flechas, todas de haste de ferro.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights battlefield ethics under pressure: warriors may set aside personal contests to confront the most consequential threat. It also reflects the Mahābhārata’s moral complexity—reverence for a guru coexists with the kṣatriya obligation to oppose him when he stands as an enemy commander.
Sañjaya reports that Sātyaki disengages from Aśvatthāman, a major opponent, and redirects his assault toward Droṇa, wounding him with twenty iron arrows—an abrupt tactical shift aimed at checking Droṇa’s dominance on the battlefield.